‘You talkin’ to me? You talkin’ to me?’

OK, maybe it’s not a classic cover. But the 40th anniversary issue of New York Magazinehas all the other ingredients that non-New Yorkers expect from (and value in) the title: meaty, readable features, effective use of illustration, funny and revealing info-graphics and great photography, such as these punchy portraits (below) of New York actors (‘They’re here, they walk among us’) by Dan Winters. Other subjects include Meryl Streep, Tim Robbins and Robert De Niro. Of course.

Winters also took this double portrait for a conversation between activist Gloria Steinem (one of the original New York Magazine writers namechecked on the first issue’s coverlines) and poet Suheir Hammad.

The cover is a nod to the past: a metallic silver version of Jay Meisel’s Manhattan skyscape used for cover of New York Magazine no. 1, published 8 April 1968.

‘The Approval Matrix’ charts the cultural highs and lowpoints of the past 40 years, with smart digs at ‘The souvenirification of Keith Haring’ and Studio 54’s ‘velvet rope’. Other info-graphics include four decades of food fads and fashion (below).

‘We try not to imagine a single type reading this magazine,’ says Moss. ‘The magazine is all about embracing the variety of characters who pass each other on the streets of the city. The magazine has to speak to all of them, otherwise it doesn’t work.’

Makes me wish we had a magazine like this for London. But we don’t have Robert De Niro, either.

Eye is the world’s most beautiful and collectable graphic design journal, published quarterly for professional designers, students and anyone interested in critical, informed writing about graphic design and visual culture. It is available from all good design bookshops and online at the Eye shop, where you can buy subscriptions and single issues.